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Shadow Husband:I Have a Hidden SSS-Class System-Chapter 55: PARTNERSHIP
The week after the reveal was different from anything Rama had experienced before.
Previously, Sekar had discovered the System through suspicion and investigation. Their relationship had been strained by secrets and lies. Trust had taken months to rebuild.
Now, she knew. She’d chosen to believe him. And she was all in.
The first morning after the warehouse meeting, Rama woke to find Sekar already awake, studying the System information he’d shared on her tablet.
"These void entities," she said without preamble. "You said the Herald is Level 73. What level are the strongest Hunters on Earth right now?"
"The top S-ranks are around Level 55-60. You’re probably Level 58."
"So we’re outmatched."
"By standard Hunter metrics, yes. But System Players scale differently. And champions even more so." He sat up, joining her. "That’s why we need the forty-seven days. To close the gap."
"How many champions do we need?"
"For the Herald? Twenty would be safe. Fifty would be comfortable. A hundred would guarantee victory."
"And you think we can create a hundred champions in forty-seven days?"
"I know we can. If we do it right." He pulled up the Worthiness Trial data on the tablet. "The trials have a sixty percent success rate with proper preparation. We find willing candidates, prepare them properly, run the trials. Some will fail. Some will die. But enough will succeed."
Sekar’s expression hardened at the mention of deaths. "How many will die?"
"Historically? About thirty to forty percent of candidates. But with better preparation, better screening, better support—I think we can get that down to fifteen to twenty percent."
"That’s still one in five dying."
"It is. But if we don’t create champions, everyone dies when the void entities arrive. That’s one hundred percent mortality." He met her eyes. "I hate it too. But this is war. War has costs."
She was quiet for a moment, processing. Then nodded. "Okay. So we minimize the deaths as much as possible. Screen carefully. Prepare thoroughly. And make sure every candidate knows the risks."
"Exactly."
"When do we start?"
"Today. We identify candidates. Tomorrow, we begin preparation."
"I can help with that. My guild has three hundred members. I can identify the strongest, most dedicated ones. The ones willing to risk it for power."
"That’s perfect. And your government contacts?"
"I’ll set up meetings. If there are really void entities coming, the association needs to know. The military needs to know. They can provide resources, support, infrastructure."
She was already planning, already strategizing. This was the S-rank Guild Master side of her—efficient, practical, focused.
"You’re taking this well," Rama observed. "Last week I told you extinction was coming, and you’re already planning logistics."
"What else am I supposed to do? Panic? Cry? Refuse to believe it?" She looked at him. "You’re my husband. You’ve never lied to me. If you say void entities are coming, then void entities are coming. So I prepare. I plan. I do what I’m good at."
"Mobilizing resources and kicking ass."
"Exactly." She closed the tablet. "Speaking of which, I need to understand your power better. The System. How it works. What you can do. If we’re partners in this, I need to know your capabilities."
"Want a demonstration?"
"Yes. Training grounds. One hour. You show me everything."
The Eternal Bond Guild training facility was empty at 7 AM. Just Rama and Sekar, facing each other across the reinforced combat floor.
"Show me," she said. "Everything you can do."
Rama activated his first skill. [Molten Strike]. His fist erupted in flames—System energy, not Hunter magic.
"This is different from Hunter fire magic," he explained. "System skills use a different energy source. They scale with level instead of training. And they have perfect precision."
He demonstrated, striking a training dummy. The flames carved exactly where he aimed, no collateral burning.
"Impressive. What else?"
[Steel Body]. His skin took on a metallic sheen, defense multiplied.
[Shadow Step]. He teleported across the room in an instant.
[Guardian’s Resolve]. An aura manifested, boosting nearby allies.
"These are just the basics," he said. "As I level up, I unlock more. Stronger abilities. Combination skills. Ultimate techniques."
"And you’re Level 43 now?"
"Yes. I’ll hit 50 soon. Maybe today or tomorrow. That’s when I become a Champion—a whole new tier of power."
"Show me your combat style. Fight me like I’m an enemy."
"Are you sure? I don’t want to hurt—" 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
"I’m S-rank, sayang. I’ve fought SS-rank monsters. I can handle you at Level 43." She drew her blade, settling into combat stance. "Come at me seriously. I want to see what you can really do."
Rama hesitated, then nodded. If she wanted serious, he’d show her serious.
He activated [Shadow Step], appearing behind her.
She spun instantly, blade intercepting his strike. "Fast. But telegraphed. Try again."
He did. [Molten Strike] combined with [Steel Body], a high-power assault.
She deflected, redirected, countered. Her S-rank experience showing through.
"Good power. But you’re fighting like you’re used to weaker opponents. Against me, you need more—"
He activated [Void Step]—the ability he’d learned from void corruption in his previous life. A skill that shouldn’t exist yet but his Regressor status had retained.
He phased partially out of reality, bypassing her guard, appearing inside her defense.
His strike stopped an inch from her throat.
She froze. "What was that?"
"Advanced technique. I’ll learn it later. Just showing you the potential." He dismissed the skill. "You see? System Players have abilities Hunters don’t. Abilities that can fight void entities."
She lowered her blade slowly. "You’re stronger than I thought. If you’re this strong at Level 43, what will you be at Level 100?"
"Strong enough to kill a Level 73 Herald. Maybe even higher."
"And the other System Players?"
"Weaker than me. I have special circumstances. But they’re still stronger than equivalent-level Hunters. They’ll be valuable assets."
Sekar sheathed her blade. "Okay. I understand your power now. Let’s talk integration. How do we combine System Players with my guild? With regular Hunters? With military forces?"
They spent the next two hours planning. Sekar’s organizational mind working with Rama’s tactical knowledge from before.
By the end, they had a framework:
Week 2-3: Identify and screen champion candidates. Prepare infrastructure.
Week 4-5: Run first batch of Worthiness Trials. Create 30-50 champions.
Week 6: Integrate champions with regular forces. Combined training.
Week 7: Final preparations. War games. Readiness assessment.
"This could work," Sekar said, reviewing their notes. "If we execute perfectly. If the trials succeed. If the government cooperates. If—"
"It’ll work," Rama said. "I’ve seen this war before. I know what we need. This time, we’ll be ready."
She looked at him curiously. "You keep saying that. ’I’ve seen this before.’ ’I know what we need.’ Your prophecy visions—how detailed are they?"
Careful. Can’t reveal too much.
"Very detailed. Down to specific conversations, specific battles, specific deaths." All true. Just not from visions. "That’s why I’m so certain. Why I know exactly what’s coming."
"It must be awful. Seeing people die. Seeing the world end. And not being able to stop it immediately."
"It was. That’s why I’m stopping it now. Before it happens. Before anyone has to die the way I’ve seen."
She hugged him suddenly, fiercely. "We’ll stop it. Together. I promise."
He held her, grateful. Last time, this partnership had formed too late, under too much stress, with too much damage already done.
This time, they had seven weeks to build it properly.
Seven weeks to become the team they should have been from the start.
The rest of the week fell into a rhythm.
Mornings: Rama grinding dungeons, pushing toward Level 50. Sekar coordinating with her guild, identifying champion candidates.
Afternoons: Combined planning sessions. Network meetings. Strategy development.
Evenings: Together. Training, talking, building trust.
The relationship deepened in ways it never had before. Not just romantic partners, but true allies. She understood his power now. Understood the threat. Understood why he’d hidden it.
And she’d chosen to stand with him anyway.
Three days into the week, Sekar arranged a meeting with Director Hartono at the Hunter Association.
"You’re sure about this?" Rama asked in the car. "Government involvement means losing some control."
"It also means resources we can’t get otherwise. Military support. Funding. Infrastructure." She squeezed his hand. "We can’t do this alone. We need allies at every level."
The meeting was tense. Hartono was skeptical, demanding proof, asking hard questions.
Rama provided it all. System demonstrations. Detailed void entity data. Tactical projections.
"If this is real," Hartono said slowly, "this is the biggest crisis humanity has ever faced."
"It is real," Sekar confirmed. "I’ve seen his power. I’ve verified the data. The threat is coming."
"And you believe him?"
"Completely."
Hartono studied them both. Then nodded. "I’ll bring this to the council. If they approve, we’ll provide support. Resources. Coordination."
"Thank you," Rama said.
"Don’t thank me yet. If you’re wrong, you’ll have wasted massive government resources on a fantasy. If you’re right..." Hartono’s expression was grim. "If you’re right, we’re all in trouble."
"We’re right," Rama said. "You’ll see in forty days when the Herald arrives."
By the end of the week, the partnership with Sekar had solidified completely. They moved as one unit now. Her handling politics and resources, him handling combat and tactics. Perfect division of labor.
The final evening, they sat on their balcony overlooking Jakarta, watching the sunset.
"Level 48 now?" Sekar asked.
"Yes. Two more levels until Champion status."
"How will that feel? Becoming a Champion?"
"Powerful. Different. Like crossing a threshold into something new." He looked at the city. "In forty days, the Herald arrives. In twenty days, we should have our first batch of champions ready. In ten days, we need government approval."
"We’ll get it. Hartono’s on our side. The council will approve."
"You sound certain."
"I am. Because we’re right. Because the threat is real. And because we’re doing everything correctly." She leaned against him. "Last week, I didn’t know any of this existed. System Players. Void entities. Secret wars. Now I’m coordinating humanity’s defense against extinction."
"Regret learning the truth?"
"Never. I prefer knowing. Prefer being part of the solution instead of blind to the problem." She turned to face him. "Thank you. For trusting me. For telling me. For making me your partner."
"Thank you for believing me. For standing with me. For being the person I can trust with this."
They kissed as the sun set over Jakarta, painting the sky in colors of fire and gold.
Last time, this moment had never happened. Too much distrust. Too much distance.
This time, they had it. Had each other. Had partnership.
And with that partnership, they’d save the world.
Together.







